The Turning Point: Edgar vs. Maynard 3

The state of Frankie
Edgar and Gray
Maynard’s faces hardly told the story of their third encounter
as the men sat on the dais for Saturday’s post-fight press
conference.

Aside from a small scrape and a sullen demeanor, Maynard did not
really seem as though he’d just lost a fight. Edgar, last to arrive
at the proceedings due to a medical exam, looked like he was
getting an early jump on his Halloween costume. The left side of
the New Jerseyan’s pate was badly swollen -- cheek puffed out, eye
barely open -- while his right side remained unblemished. To
someone who had not watched UFC
136, the only giveaway that Edgar won would have been the shiny
lightweight title belt perched behind his nameplate.

When fights turn, they generally do so because of an action taken,
but a fight can also change course as a result of something left
undone. Such was the case in Houston on Saturday, when, despite
inflicting remarkable damage on the champion in the opening round,
Maynard appeared to let victory slip right through his hands.

Two minutes and 20 seconds into the bout, Maynard began his assault
in earnest with a vicious lead right uppercut. Clearly dazed, Edgar
stumbled backward as “The Bully” gave chase, duplicating the punch
and finishing with a knee up the middle. Maynard swung with ill
intent, lead uppercuts and left hooks, until a right hand sent the
champion tumbling to the mat. Maynard looked to pounce as Edgar
clung desperately to a single-leg, and then kept headhunting on the
feet.

With 60 seconds left in the first round, Edgar was streaming blood
from his nose, a situation which only worsened when Maynard dropped
him with a knee. The challenger threw the kitchen sink at Edgar in
an attempt to finish, but just as in their January meeting, Edgar
absorbed all the punishment his foe could dish out and kept
coming.

“I did hit him with a knee. I hit him with a right. I think I hit
him with a hook. I mean, what else? If there was a bat there, I
would’ve probably hit him with that, too,” Maynard said during the
post-fight press conference, turning toward UFC boss Dana White to
deadpan, “Where do you keep the bats in the cage?”

Foreign objects may not have been necessary if Maynard had only
maintained his level of offense in subsequent rounds. Instead, the
Xtreme Couture Mixed Martial Arts fighter seemed to grow more
tentative as the fight wore on, allowing Edgar to regain his
composure, find a rhythm on the feet and eventually score a
highlight-reel fourth-round knockout. According to FightMetric.com,
Maynard connected with 33 of 73 attempted strikes in the first
round; over the remaining 13-plus minutes, he landed only 19 of
107.

“Maybe, yeah, I should have finished him in the second. I don’t
know,” said an exasperated Maynard, who denied that hand or knee
injuries had any factor in his diminished work rate. “I was trying
to pick a shot. When he moves, he does a good job with that. I kind
of tried to load up [on punches] a little bit instead of
flowing.”

The deciding factors in Saturday’s fight were the resilience and
skill of Frankie Edgar, though it was Gray Maynard’s inability to
maintain momentum which shifted the fight in the champ’s direction.
Maynard took his foot off the gas in round two -- not the worst
idea after you’ve handily won the first of five scheduled rounds --
he just forgot to push the pedal back down.